Making Fuel from Leftovers

Making Fuel from Leftovers

Waste not: A microbial electrolysis cell (left) uses bacteria to convert organic materials into hydrogen, with a boost from a small external power source (right).

Unsure what to do with your Thanksgiving leftovers? According to Penn State University (PSU) researchers, feeding table scraps to bacteria may be a clean and efficient way to produce hydrogen that can be used as fuel. Bruce Logan, Kappe professor of environmental engineering, and his colleagues at PSU have designed a tabletop reactor that uses bacteria to break down biodegradable organic material. Adding a small jolt of energy to the system causes hydrogen gas to bubble up to the surface. Logan says that this biological process–compared with today’s existing techniques–may be a more sustainable and efficient alternative for generating hydrogen.

The promise of hydrogen as a fuel source has led major automakers like BMW, Daimler Chrysler, Ford, and Toyota to develop test cars that run on hydrogen-powered fuel cells. These fuel cells convert hydrogen and oxygen into electricity, giving off water as a byproduct. It’s a zero-emissions model that could vastly reduce reliance on polluting fossil fuels. But there’s a catch: generating hydrogen itself can involve the burning of fossil fuels like natural gas. Cleaner methods of producing hydrogen include using geothermal, wind, and solar energy to separate water into hydrogen and oxygen, in a process called electrolysis. However, these processes are expensive and require large amounts of electricity. If scaled up, these methods could prove very inefficient.

Some scientists have concentrated on creating microbial fuel cells–reactors that use bacteria to catalyze reactions that produce electricity. Logan’s lab found a way to improve on existing microbial fuel cells by breaking down end products, such as acetic acid.

The researchers grew bacteria in a specially designed, oxygen-free reactor: a bioelectrochemically assisted microbial reactor, which they dubbed BEAMR. The reactor comprises two compartments. The first houses a negatively charged anode, composed of granulated graphite, which Logan sprayed with ammonia gas to help bacteria stick better. The second compartment contains a positively charged cathode of carbon, with a platinum catalyst. An ion-exchange membrane sits between the compartments. Logan used a small wire to connect both electrodes to a small external power source.

The researchers then fed the microbial reactor a varied diet of acetic acid and cellulose. They found that as bacteria fed, the reactor released protons and electrons. The electrons were immediately taken up by the anode, while the protons crossed the membrane to the cathode. The energy from the electrons (which amounted to 0.3 volts), coupled with a short jolt of external voltage (0.2 volts), passed into the cathode compartment, joining with the protons to produce hydrogen gas, which researchers captured and measured in a tube.

Penn State researchers have developed a microbial electrolysis cell, which they call BEAMR, to produce hydrogen. The process uses bacteria to break down organic material, such as acetic acid and cellulose. A small external burst of voltage aids in boosting hydrogen production.Credit: Zina Deretsky, National Science Foundation